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Reference 450M+ sold

The History of the Rubik's Cube

The Rubik's Cube is the best-selling puzzle of all time — more than 450 million sold. But before it became a speedcubing icon, it began as a teaching tool built by a Hungarian professor who wasn't even sure it could be solved.

Here is how a wooden classroom model became a worldwide phenomenon, and how solvers went from days of struggle to sub-4-second world records.

Timeline

  1. 1974
    Ernő Rubik, a professor of architecture in Budapest, builds the first working prototype out of wood and rubber bands to teach his students about three-dimensional geometry. He calls it the "Magic Cube" (Bűvös Kocka) — and it reportedly takes him over a month to solve his own invention.
  2. 1977
    The Magic Cube goes on sale in Hungarian toy shops. It spreads slowly at first, passed hand to hand among mathematicians and curious players behind the Iron Curtain.
  3. 1980
    The Ideal Toy Company licenses the puzzle for worldwide distribution and renames it the "Rubik's Cube." It launches internationally and wins multiple Toy of the Year awards.
  4. 1981
    Cube mania peaks. Tens of millions of cubes sell in a single year, solution booklets top bestseller lists, and the cube becomes a defining symbol of 1980s pop culture.
  5. 1982
    The first World Rubik's Cube Championship is held in Budapest. Minh Thai wins with a time of 22.95 seconds — a number that would look almost leisurely to modern solvers.
  6. 2003
    The World Cube Association (WCA) is founded, standardizing rules and records and kicking off the modern competitive era. Regular competitions resume worldwide.
  7. Today
    Today, methods like CFOP and Roux, faster hardware, and a global community have pushed the single-solve world record under four seconds, with robots solving in a fraction of a second.

The rise of speedcubing

Early solvers relied on simple layer-by-layer methods. As the community grew, advanced systems emerged — most famously CFOP (Cross, F2L, OLL, PLL), popularized by Jessica Fridrich — that minimize moves and turn solving into a sport of recognition and finger speed.

World records and the modern era

Average solve times have plummeted from over 20 seconds in 1982 to under 6 seconds for the best competitors today, with single solves dropping below 4 seconds. Purpose-built robots have pushed the absolute record into the hundreds of milliseconds.

Beyond the 3x3

The cube's success spawned an entire family of twisty puzzles — from the 2x2 Pocket Cube to giant NxN cubes and shape-mods — each with its own solving methods and competitive scene.